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Roys' Austin-Healey
October 2000





October 08th

Well, we have been offline for a couple months now. Between my being hospitalized for bronchitis, constant requests by my children to repair other things (who said retirement was boring) and the fact that it has been a wet and cold winter well, not much work on the Healey has been done. A few bits and pieces during the spare time has been accomplished but not to my satisfaction. Unfortunately, when you are a retired person on a pension trying to restore an expensive English masterpiece like the Austin Healey 3000 MarkI there will be lulls in the work. I sometimes wish I could be like most other restorers of this kind of vehicle and just bring it down to the local body man or mechanic and say "this week I want the such-and-such done". But then, I wouldn't have the joy of doing it myself. So, this long explanation is just my disclaimer that some months not a lot of work will be done but I promise that my Healey is an on-going work of love and as it progresses I will report the advancements here and as always if anyone has any questions please feel free to email me.

Most of the work the last couple months has been touching up body work and redoing the dash. The first coat of primer paint has been applied so that all the small imperfections that you think are not there will suddenly leap out. I have spent endless hours going around touching up even the smallest imperfections. From experience I know that when the coats of paint go on I know that even the smallest sanding scratch will show up and appear like a sledge hammer banged into the body. This part of the body work is one of the longest and most tedious of all the work. Perfection is not only essential but also very frustrating and time consuming.

I was was able to work on my dash board the last couple months. I originally built a beige coloured one but soon discovered that any dirt marks are magnified on the creme coloured dash. Instead, I ripped the dash apart again and re-did it in black. As for the dash there are official Austin Healey dashes you can buy, after market dashes easily available and even secondhand ones. What I did was rescue the original instrumentation, bought a template from an after market store and recovered it myself and then installed the original instruments. It is not easy and very time consuming but it will save you a lot of money. If you are comfortable with your wood working capabilities then I would recommend a nice, light and grainy wood that is sanded smooth and shellacked about a dozen times. The only problem with this is that I have seen some people doing their own wood dashes and it makes their expensive car have an inside that looks like a cheap home made kit car. So my advice is, unless you are VERY good with woodworking then stay clear on making your own wood grain dashes.

I then went to the local Sunday Market and got a great deal on a roll of black car carpetting. I was able to find someone who said that after I cut the carpeting to the apropriate sizes that he would properly sew the edges to a professional edge.

Another small thing I accomplished was finding a pull switch for my headlights. I went to my favourite car recyclers and after some patient searching found one. It was hard finding one that had the same pull and twist that the Healeys work on but I got lucky. The white writing had worn off but I took it home and rubbed some paint over it and after wiping it clean, the paint had seeped into the wording and voila' the wording was visible again.
dashboard
dashboard
headlight switch


I also built and installed the inside passenger shelf and cut and installed some of the black carpeting under the dash. Although this may not seem the appropriate time to do this step it is just another example of completing what you can under the circumstances. I will take great measurements to protect it from any future dust, primer and paint. I noticed that the Healey Factory completes the interior BEFORE they paint the car. They just carefully cover it all up in paper before the spraying starts.
shelf

I am currently in the process of finding a car heater fan box. The one that came with the Healey was destroyed and a new one costs about $350 AUS which makes that out of the question. I have been scouring the wreckers and have so far found only smashed up ones. I was able to find one from European Auto but it is not quite right but I can make jerry-rig it to fit my car but I am not happy with the finished product. This box is made of Bacalite so can't be fixed. What I am planning on doing is separating a couple of broken ones and making fiberglass molds of the two halves that are not damaged. Once I make up a mold I can whip off as many fiberglass ones as I like and since I am making one for myself anyway then I can make a few extras and sell them to anyone interested. The cost will be signaficantly less than the factories price so iff anyone is interested feel free to contact me.

I found someone to repair my original but broken steering wheel. When the car was rolled I guess the driver must have rammed into the steering wheel. I have looked at after market wheels and I have to admit that an original steering wheel with the Healey symbol staring at you is something you cant replace with an inexpensive after market product. The major problem is that the horn button is over $300 Australian Dollars. If anyone has a horn button or knows where I can find an inexpensive one please feel free to let me know. Thank you.

Finally, closing off this part of the month is one more part I am looking for. The top of the heater box has a valve that I have been unable to locate. It comes in two pieces and the alluminum bottom piece of mine has just fallen apart. If anyone knows where I can locate one so that I may finally install this heater please let me know. They cost about $160.00 AUS for the two peices here and for some reason I cant get just the bottom half.
heater heater valve


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